Abstract

Effective nutrition policies require timely, accurate individual dietary consumption data; collection of such information has been hampered by cost and complexity of dietary surveys and lag in producing results. The objective of this work was to assess accuracy and cost-effectiveness of a streamlined, tablet-based dietary data collection platform for 24-hour individual dietary recalls (24HR) administered using INDDEX24 platform v. a pen-and-paper interview(PAPI) questionnaire, with weighed food record (WFR) as a benchmark. This cross-sectional comparative study included women 18-49 years old from rural Burkina Faso (n 116 INDDEX24; n 115 PAPI). A WFR was conducted; the following day, a 24HR was administered by different interviewers. Food consumption data were converted into nutrient intakes. Validity of 24HR estimates of nutrient and food group consumption was based on comparison with WFR using equivalence tests (group level) and percentages of participants within ranges of percentage error (individual level). Both modalities performed comparably estimating consumption of macro- and micronutrients, food groups and quantities (modalities' divergence from WFR not significantly different). Accuracy of both modalities was acceptable (equivalence to WFR significant at P < 0·05) at group level for macronutrients, less so for micronutrients and individual-level consumption (percentage within ±20 % for WFR, 17-45 % for macronutrients, 5-17 % for micronutrients). INDDEX24 was more cost-effective than PAPI based on superior accuracy of a composite nutrient intake measure (but not gram amount or item count) due to lower time and personnel costs. INDDEX24 for 24HR dietary surveys linked to dietary reference data shows comparable accuracy to PAPI at lower cost.

Highlights

  • To be effective in addressing nutrition and health challenges, food and nutrition policies must be based on an empirical understanding of food consumption patterns: dietary adequacy, the nutritional value of foods, food safety, and food sources

  • The present study reports the results of a comparison of a 24-hour individual dietary recalls (24HR) administered using a paperbased questionnaire (PAPI) with the computer-assisted personal interview (CAPI) approach using INDDEX24 in terms of accuracy and costeffectiveness

  • Due to implausible values and matching issue between weighed food record (WFR) and INDDEX24 because of errors in respondent ID, 5 INDDEX24 and 5 PAPI respondents were excluded from the analysis (Figure 1)

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Summary

Introduction

To be effective in addressing nutrition and health challenges, food and nutrition policies must be based on an empirical understanding of food consumption patterns: dietary adequacy, the nutritional value of foods, food safety, and food sources. Household food consumption data derived from household consumption and expenditure surveys (HCES) have been used to estimate individual consumption, but do not account for the intrahousehold allocation of food [23,24,25] and may miss consumption of food away from home [26]. Given these limitations, the detailed information derived from individual quantitative dietary recalls is more appropriate for many types of analyses and policy decisions

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